Eva (born 21 May 1932) and Abraham (born 13 June 1934) Both parents were Jews, and active in the Jewish community. When
Nazi Germany invaded the country in 1940, the Nazis started to separate the Jews from the general population and prohibited them from working. They attended the local school, and were able to send letters (albeit in code) to their parents. By 1944, the Nazis realized that Jewish children were being sent into hiding in rural villages. They found that some people were willing, in return for payment, to reveal hiding places of Jewish children. The surviving policeman was spared the death penalty because he was deemed to have acted in the line of duty. as well as in the Dutch Resistance Museum, a part of the
Fries Museum in Leeuwarden. ==References==